• thedruid@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Yeah I love linux, but it’s user experience , while light years ahead of what I used in the late nineties and early aughts, is still clunky compared to others.

    That being said, honestly most of linux’s issues are GUI related, when it comes to going mainstream. The capabilities and efficiency are far ahead of windows and mac os but most users don’t care.

    Directions, examples and mundane work should all be seamless for mainstream consumers.

    A good rule of thumb is, " if a user has to look for it to fix it, or open a terminal window to install software, then it won’t be accepted fully.

    Mainstream users don’t want to type commands in a prompt. Why does everyone think windows blew DOS out of the water in sales? It wasn’t because DOS wasn’t working. It was, hell early windows ( I started on 3.11 so that’s my limit of knowledge ) still used DOS.

    So bottom line. Start putting the non tech consumer first or we’ll forever be stuck in this “almost mainstream” category forever.

    • mpblack@lemmy.ml
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      12 hours ago

      I don’t see them as mutually exclusive - can’t Linux be user friendly for the non-techie while also offering a techie lots of flexibility and command-line joy? 🤷‍♂️

      • thedruid@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        They can and should. But they don’t. They really only cater to the techie, because that’s who uses it

        Then they got pissed when their “marketing” efforts fall shorts.

        Stop acting like non Linux users are dumb. They aren’t. they’ve used the time others spent learning other thing, while others spent their time on techie things . Their priorities were different. Or maybe their poor and don’t care about that as they need a PC but have to work 80 hours to feed their family.

        But no. Instead of making life better through foss for those who need it, you’re making Linux some unattainable nerd toy.

        We can tell ourselves we don’t care. But we do. Or the thread wouldn’t be here

        • mpblack@lemmy.ml
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          11 hours ago

          I agree. It’s not constructive to call non-techies “dumb.” Nor is it helpful to demand they”just” spend 30 min searching for solutions online. If you love tech, this is worthwhile - if you’re, say, a rights activist you’d rather spend that time reading an important report or meeting with people to advance your work; if you’re a retiree with limited means, then it might be overwhelming to “just go online”; and if you’re a musician working on an album, why should you need to spend time on tech when you could be spending that time mixing? I see examples of Linux becoming pretty user friendly compared to days of yore (eg Mint, Ubuntu), but has that improvement somehow compromised the techie side of Linux?

    • brax@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      Idk mainstream users should learn to learn and empower themselves with knowledge.

      The enshitification of hardware and software by constantly catering to the dumbest of people is hurting everybody.

    • Broadfern@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      This exactly.

      I enjoy the level of control I have on my Linux machine but I spend about 40% of my time in CLI.

      I recently had to troubleshoot a windows machine, and the lack of control was frustrating but every step for that problem was GUI-centric. Everyday people don’t want to remember commands so they can set up their browser and word processor. They want (to them) simple and straightforward.

      To us it’s a low bar, and most of us are from the generations that dreamt of a predominantly tech-literate society, but that’s not reality. We have to meet them where they are, and if they want to learn beyond that then we welcome them in.

    • atzanteol@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      So bottom line. Start putting the non tech consumer first or we’ll forever be stuck in this “almost mainstream” category forever.

      I’m okay with that.

      “Mainstream” users are getting stupider. Even Windows is to difficult for them. They want the Apple walled garden with a subscription plan for their devices and no permissions to do anything that a corporation doesn’t want you to do.

      Fuck. That.

      • thedruid@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        So. We just encourage ignorance and security threats so we… can… be … better than them? I don’t think that’s the healthiest outlook …

        • Abnorc@lemm.ee
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          13 hours ago

          What we really need is to improve the technical literacy (and overall education too) of the general public. That will help towards solving many other issues as well.

          By all means, Linux’s UX should be improved as long as it doesn’t come at the cost of freedom or functionality, but we need to improve as people too.

          • thedruid@lemmy.world
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            12 hours ago

            Are seriously that obtuse.? Why would Anyone think any better of your conversation when that is the level of discourse you bring?

            "Wut? " What a classic symptom of the dumbing down of society, but you go ahead and keep feeling superior

            “Wut”. Way to make yourself look less than literate.

            In any case I’m done with this. Have a good day